Yahoo – AFP,
May 25, 2017
London
(AFP) - "Furious" British officials scolded their US counterparts on
Wednesday following repeated leaks of shared material about the investigation
into the deadly Manchester terror attack.
British
Home Secretary Amber Rudd roasted the US Department of Homeland Security and
other intelligence branches after the bomber's identity and details of the
probe leaked out to US media before British officials felt ready to disclose
them.
But shortly
after the interior minister complained, The New York Times newspaper again
scooped British authorities and other media by publishing photographs from the
scene of remnants of the bomb.
The
pictures were apparently taken by police investigators and, according to
British government ministry sources, leaked by US counterparts they had been
shared with.
"We
are furious. This is completely unacceptable," a government ministry
source said.
"These
images leaked from inside the US system will be distressing for victims, their
families and the wider public.
"The
issue is being raised at every relevant level by the British authorities with
their US counterparts."
The row --
which goes to the heart of the close intelligence-sharing relationship between
the two allies -- provides an awkward backdrop to Prime Minister Theresa May's
meeting with US President Donald Trump at the NATO summit in Brussels on
Thursday.
'It is
irritating'
Rudd
revealed the frustration going on inside the probe to find the suspected
network behind bomber Salman Abedi.
"The
British police have been very clear that they want to control the flow of
information in order to protect operational integrity... the element of
surprise," Rudd told BBC radio.
"So it
is irritating if it gets released from other sources and I have been very clear
with our friends that that should not happen again."
Asked if
the US authorities had compromised the investigation, she said: "I
wouldn't go that far.
"But I
can say that they are perfectly clear about the situation and that it shouldn't
happen again."
But the
National Counter Terrorism Policing body said the investigation was being
"undermined".
“We greatly
value the important relationships we have with our trusted intelligence, law
enforcement and security partners around the world," a spokesman said.
"These
relationships enable us to collaborate and share privileged and sensitive
information.
“When that
trust is breached it undermines these relationships, and undermines our
investigations and the confidence of victims, witnesses and their families.
"This
damage is even greater when it involves unauthorised disclosure of potential
evidence in the middle of a major counter-terrorism investigation.”
Bomber
identity leaked
Twenty-two
people, including several children, were killed on Monday when a bomb went off
at a concert by US pop star Ariana Grande in Manchester, northwest England.
British-born
Abedi was identified as the suspected suicide bomber responsible. His name first
surfaced in US media reports Tuesday, based on briefings given to US officials
by their counterparts in London.
Earlier, US
media, also quoting US security sources, identified the assailant as a suicide
bomber, well before British authorities confirmed that publicly.
Department
of Homeland Security spokesman David Lapan confirmed that Rudd, who spoke with
DHS Secretary John Kelly by phone Wednesday, had raised the matter.
"They
communicated to DHS as well as other US government agencies their concern over
leaks about their investigation into the incident in Manchester -- information
that's gotten into the press and public through US sources when the UK was
leading the investigation and wants to protect the information," Lapan
said.
"They've
asked all of us to better protect the information that we have so as not to
impede their investigation. We'll do whatever we can to honour that."
DHS and
intelligence agencies contacted by AFP would not comment on whether they were
the ones who leaked the information.


No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.